Of the 172,800 seconds on offer in domestic rugby league this season, Leeds winger Ryan Hall has not missed a single one.

The 24-year-old, nicknamed by his club as 'WBW' which stands for 'world's best winger', has featured for the duration of the 36 games available to a side which has competed in the World Club Challenge, the Challenge Cup Final and the Super League semi-finals.

And, as a result of Leeds' thrilling 13-12 win over Wigan last Friday, Hall - who also played for England in the summer - is 80 minutes and a Grand Final away from a clean sweep of game time for the 2012 season.

It is some achievement in an era where talk concentrates on the demands placed on players but Hall is not alone, with Leeds captain Kevin Sinfield and team-mate Zak Hardaker also going the extra mile.

Hall, though, says he is ready to put his body on the line one more time in pursuit of what would be Leeds' sixth Grand Final success in nine years.

"Personally I've played in every single game, every second, but I play on the wing!" he told Press Association Sport. "We get looked after in between games, so I'm fine.

"I'm a professional sportsperson and it's part and parcel of what we do. There's not just me, there's Kevin Sinfield and he does a lot more than me in games and I respect that from him."

Despite being happy to turn up and put in the hard yards week in, week out, Hall would have rather be heading into Saturday's meeting with Warrington with a week's rest behind him.

But, as the fifth-ranked team in the competition, the Rhinos have again had to go the distance by playing every week in the play-offs, with the last game being at the DW Stadium, when Wigan handpicked them as opponents via the controversial 'Clubcall' system.

For the second successive year, though, Leeds made a mockery of that system, having beaten Warrington by the same means a year ago.

"I'd rather finish first and have the benefit of having a week off. Two weeks before the final, that is beneficial," Hall added.

"We've done it like we did last year, we had to go away to the side leading the competition, and we did it that way again. Each club are entitled to their opinion and Clubcall has to be done.

"Over the last two years both teams have said they would pick the lowest-ranked team, which is sensible. If we were in that situation we'd do the same thing, it just so happened that we finished there twice.

"If anything, Wigan would have been silly to pick Warrington, who finished second and beat them during the season."

The game with Warrington provides Leeds with a rematch of their humbling Challenge Cup Final loss to the Wolves in August.

That trophy has become synonymous with Tony Smith's men, just as the Super League has with Leeds, and Hall is intent on keeping it that way.

"There are other incentives than that which tick over," he said when asked about revenge.

"It's not a God-given right that we should win this, but we've got to put in some hard work and we know how to win it, we've just got to go out and do it again."